Operational tools to build a multicriteria territorial risk scale with multiple stakeholders. Cailloux, O., Mayag, B., Meyer, P., & Mousseau, V. Reliability Engineering & System Safety, 120:88–97, December, 2013.
Operational tools to build a multicriteria territorial risk scale with multiple stakeholders [link]Hal  Operational tools to build a multicriteria territorial risk scale with multiple stakeholders [link]Article  doi  abstract   bibtex   
Evaluating and comparing the threats and vulnerabilities associated with territorial zones according to multiple criteria (industrial activity, population, etc.) can be a time-consuming task and often requires the participation of several stakeholders. Rather than a direct evaluation of these zones, building a risk assessment scale and using it in a formal procedure permits to automate the assessment and therefore to apply it in a repeated way and in large-scale contexts and, provided the chosen procedure and scale are accepted, to make it objective. One of the main difficulties of building such a formal evaluation procedure is to account for the multiple decision makers' preferences. The procedure used in this article, Electre Tri, uses the performances of each territorial zone on multiple criteria, together with preferential parameters from multiple decision makers, to qualitatively assess their associated risk level. We also present operational tools in order to implement such a procedure in practice, and show their use on a detailed example.
@article{cailloux_operational_2013,
	title = {Operational tools to build a multicriteria territorial risk scale with multiple stakeholders},
	keywords = {Preference modeling},
	volume = {120},
	issn = {0951-8320},
	doi = {10.1016/j.ress.2013.06.004},
	abstract = {Evaluating and comparing the threats and vulnerabilities associated with territorial zones according to multiple criteria (industrial activity, population, etc.) can be a time-consuming task and often requires the participation of several stakeholders. Rather than a direct evaluation of these zones, building a risk assessment scale and using it in a formal procedure permits to automate the assessment and therefore to apply it in a repeated way and in large-scale contexts and, provided the chosen procedure and scale are accepted, to make it objective. One of the main difficulties of building such a formal evaluation procedure is to account for the multiple decision makers' preferences. The procedure used in this article, Electre Tri, uses the performances of each territorial zone on multiple criteria, together with preferential parameters from multiple decision makers, to qualitatively assess their associated risk level. We also present operational tools in order to implement such a procedure in practice, and show their use on a detailed example.},
	urldate = {2013-09-07},
	journal = {Reliability Engineering \& System Safety},
	author = {Cailloux, Olivier and Mayag, Brice and Meyer, Patrick and Mousseau, Vincent},
	month = dec,
	year = {2013},
	url_HAL = {https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-00857929/},
	url_Article = {https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-00857929/document},
	pages = {88--97}
}

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